诱导自由飞行蜜蜂的乙醇耐受性

Laura E. Stephenson, A. Chicas-Mosier, T. Black, H. Wells, C. Abramson
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引用次数: 3

摘要

作者:斯蒂芬森,劳拉;Chicas-Mosier,安娜;黑色,盖;井,哈林顿;摘要:乙醇依赖影响着美国1500多万成年人的健康。由于蜜蜂的神经结构与脊椎动物的相似,以及它们复杂的社会行为,蜜蜂被用作乙醇研究的模型。本研究比较了蜜蜂自由飞行访问后,暴露于乙醇在含水蔗糖食物来源。n对单个蜜蜂进行6次附着访问,并对含有1M蔗糖的试验站进行跟踪。附着后,蜜蜂被随机分配到五组中的一组:0%、2.5%、5%、10% EtOH,或分阶段增加乙醇浓度(2.5%、5%、10%)。结果表明,蜜蜂在没有回避或改变行为的情况下耐受高达2.5%的EtOH,在没有回避但飞行速度较慢的情况下耐受高达5%的EtOH。当乙醇含量为10%时,第18次返程时的损耗率为75%。n在分阶段增加浓度的情况下,蜜蜂比在附着后提供10%的蔗糖溶液中的乙醇的蜜蜂更有可能返回。本研究的结果表明,乙醇诱导的对乙醇效应的耐受性可以通过增加EtOH来实现,但只能通过消耗来实现。n其他采食效率指标未显示乙醇诱导耐受性。了解蜜蜂对乙醇的耐受性是如何形成的,可以在最大限度地减少伦理考虑的情况下,为人类的这些过程提供见解。
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Inducing Ethanol Tolerance in Free-Flying Honey Bees (Apis mellifera L.)
Author(s): Stephenson, Laura; Chicas-Mosier, Ana; Black, Timothy; Wells, Harrington; Abramson, Charles | Abstract: Ethanol dependency affects the health of more than 15 million adults in the United States of America. Honey bees have been used as a model for ethanol studies because of similarities in neural structure to vertebrates and their complex social behaviors. This study compares honey bee free-flight visitation to a food source after exposure to ethanol in aqueous sucrose.n Individual bees were followed making 6 attachment visits to a test-station containing 1M sucrose. After attachment, honey bees were randomly assigned to one of five groups: 0%, 2.5%, 5%, 10% EtOH, or a staged increase in ethanol concentrations (2.5%, 5%, 10%). The results indicate that honey bees tolerate up to 2.5% EtOH without avoidance or altered behavior, and up to 5% EtOH without avoidance but with slower trips. At 10% ethanol, attrition was 75% by the 18th return trip.n In the staged increase in concentration, bees were more likely to return than bees that were offered 10% ethanol in sucrose solution after attachment. The results of this study imply that ethanol induced tolerance to the effects of ethanol can be achieved in honey bees through incremental increase in EtOH but only in terms of attrition.n Other measures of foraging efficiency did not show ethanol induced tolerance. nnUnderstanding how ethanol tolerance develops in bees may provide insight into these processes in humans with minimized ethical considerations.
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